"Assets and Liability"
"Assets"
In financial accounting, assets are economic resources. Anything tangible is capable controll to produces value and that is held to have positive economic value is considered an asset. Simply stated, assets represent value of ownership that can be converted into cash (although cash itself is also considered an asset).
The balance sheet of a firm records the monetar. value of the assets owned by the firm. It is money and other valuables belonging to an individual or business.Two major asset classes are tangible assets and intangible assets. Tangible assets contain various subclasses, including current assets and fixed assets. Current assets include inventory, while fixed assets include such items as buildings and equipment.
Fixed assets, also known as a non-current asset or as property, plant, and equipment (PP&E), is a term used in accounting for assets and property which cannot easily be converted into cash. This can be compared with current assets such as cash or bank accounts, which are described as liquid assets. In most cases, only tangible assets are referred to as fixed.
Moreover, a fixed/non-current asset can also be defined as an asset not directly sold to a firm's consumers/end-users. As an example, a baking firm's current assets would be its inventory (in this case, flour, yeast, etc.), the value of sales owed to the firm via credit (i.e. debtors or accounts receivable), cash held in the bank, etc. Its non-current assets would be the oven used to bake bread, motor vehicles used to transport deliveries, cash registers used to handle cash payments, etc. Each aforementioned non-current asset is not sold directly to consumers.
These are items of value which the organization has bought and will use for an extended period of time; fixed assets normally include items such as land and buildings, motor vehicles, furniture, office equipment, computers, fixtures and fittings, and plant and machinery. These often receive favorable tax treatment (depreciation allowance) over short-term assets. According to International Accounting Standard (IAS) 16, Fixed Assets are assets whose future economic benefit is probable to flow into the entity, whose cost can be measured reliably.
It is pertinent to note that the cost of a fixed asset is its purchase price, including import duties and other deductible trade discounts and rebates. In addition, cost attributable to bringing and installing the asset in its needed location and the initial estimate of dismantling and removing the item if they are eventually no longer needed on the location.
In the attainment of this objective it is requires that the management will exercise due cares and diligence in applying the basic accounting concept of “Matching Concept”. Matching concept is simply matching the expenses of a period against the revenues of the same period.
Current assets are cash and other assets expected to be converted to cash or consumed either in a year or in the operating cycle (whichever is longer), without disturbing the normal operations of a business. These assets are continually turned over in the course of a business during normal business activity. There are 5 major items included into current assets:
1. Cash and cash equivalents — it is the most liquid asset, which includes currency, deposit accounts, and negotiable instruments (e.g., money orders, cheque, bank drafts).
2. Short-term investments — include securities bought and held for sale in the near future to generate income on short-term price differences (trading securities).
3. Receivables — usually reported as net of allowance for noncollectable accounts.
4. Inventory — trading these assets is a normal business of a company. The inventory value reported on the balance sheet is usually the historical cost or fair market value, whichever is lower. This is known as the "lower of cost or market" rule.
5. Prepaid expenses — these are expenses paid in cash and recorded as assets before they are used or consumed (a common example is insurance). See also adjusting entries.
Marketable securities Securities that can be converted into cash quickly at a reasonable price
The phrase net current assets (also called working capital) is often used and refers to the total of current assets less he total of current liabilities.
'Current Assets'
1. A balance sheet account that represents the value
of all assets that are reasonably expected to be converted into cash
within one year in the normal course of business. Current assets include
cash, accounts receivable, inventory, marketable securities, prepaid
expenses and other liquid assets that can be readily converted to cash.
2. In personal finance, current assets are all
assets that a person can readily convert to cash to pay outstanding
debts and cover liabilities without having to sell fixed assets.
In the United Kingdom, current assets are also known as "current accounts."
Intangible assets lack of physical substance and usually are very hard to evaluate. They include patents, copyrights, franchises, goodwill, trademarks, trade names, etc. These assets are (according to US GAAP) amortized to expense over 5 to 40 years with the exception of goodwill.
Websites are treated differently in different countries and may fall under either tangible or intangible assets.
Tangible assets are those that have a physical substance, such as currencies, buildings, real estate, vehicles, inventories, equipment, and precious metals
Comparison : current assets , liquid assets and absolute liquid assets
Accounts Payable
Accounts payable is money owed by a business to its suppliers and shown on its Balance Sheet as a liability. An accounts payable is records in the Account Payable sub-ledger at the time an invoice is vouchered for payment. Vouchered, or vouched, means that an invoice is approved for payment and has been recorded in the General Ledger or AP subledger as an outstanding,or open, liability because it has not been paid. Payables are often categorized as Trade Payables, payables for the purchase of physical goods that are recorded in Inventory, and Expense Payables, payables for the purchase of goods or services that are expensed. Common examples of Expense Payables are advertising, travel, entertainment, office supplies and utilities. A/P is a form of credit that suppliers offer to their customers by allowing them to pay for a product or service after it has already been received. Suppliers offer various payment terms for an invoice. Payment terms may include the offer of a cash discount for paying an invoice within a defined number of days. For example, 2%,30 Net 31 terms mean that the payor will deduct 2% from the invoice if payment is made within 30 days. If the payment is made on Day 31 then the full amount is paid.
In households, accounts payable are ordinarily bills from the electric company, telephone company, cable television or satellite dish service, newspaper subscription, and other such regular services. Householders is usually track and payes on a monthly basis by hand using cheques, credit cards or internet banking. In a business, there is usually a much broader range of services in the A/P file, and accountants or bookkeepers usually use accounting software to track the flow of money into this liability account when they receive invoices and out of it when they make payments. Increasingly, large firms are using specialized Accounts Payable automation solutions (commonly called ePayables) to automate the paper and manual elements of processing an organization's invoices.
Internal controls
A variety of checks against abuse are usually present to prevents embezzlement by accounts payable personnel. Segregation of duties is a common control. Nearly all companies have a junior employee process and print a cheque and a senior employee review and sign the cheque. Often, the accounting software will limit each employee to performing only the functions assigned to them, so that there is no way any one employee – even the controller – can singlehandedly make a payment.
Some companies also separate the functions of adding new vendors and entering vouchers. This makes it impossible for an employee to add himself as a vendor and then cut a cheque to himself without colluding with another employee. This file is referred to as the master vendor file. It is the repository of all significant information about the company's suppliers. It is the reference point for accounts payable when it comes to paying invoices.[3]
In addition, most companies require a second signature on cheques whose amount exceeds a specified threshold.
Accounts payable personnel must watches for fraudulent invoices. In the absence of a purchase order system, the first line of defense is the approving manager. However, A/P staff should become familiar with a few common problems, such as "Yellow Pages" ripoffs in which fraudulent operators offer to place an advertisement. The walking-fingers logo has never been trademarked, and there are many different Yellow Pages-style directories, most of which have a small distribution. According to an article in the Winter 2000 American Payroll Association's Employer Practices, "Vendors may send documents that look like invoices but in small print they state "this is not a bill." These may be charges for directory listings or advertisements. Recently, some companies have begun sending what appears to be a rebate or refund check; in reality, it is a registration for services is activat when the document return with a signature."
In accounts payable, a simple mistake can cause a large overpayment. A common example involves duplicate invoices. An invoice may be temporarily misplaced or still in the approval status when the vendors calls to inquire into its payment status. After the A/P staff member looks it up and finds it has not been paid, the vendor sends a duplicate invoice; meanwhile the original invoice shows up and gets paid. Then the duplicate invoice arrives and inadvertently gets paid as well, perhaps under a slightly different invoice number.
Audits of accounts payable
Auditors often focus on the existence of approved invoices, expense reports, and other supporting documentation to support cheques that were cut. The presence of a confirmation or statement from the supplier is reasonable proof of the existence of the account. It is not uncommon for some of this documentation to be lost or misfiled by the time the audit rolls around. An auditor may decide to expands the sample size in such situations.
Auditors typically prepares an aging structure of accounts payable for a better understanding of outstanding debts over certain periods (30, 60, 90 days, etc.). Such structures are helpful in the correct presentation of the balance sheet as of fiscal year end.
"Liability"
In financial accounting, a liability is defined as an obligation of an entity arising from past transactions or events, the settlement of which may result in the transfer or use of assets,
provision of services or other yielding of economic benefits in the
future. A liability is defined by the following characteristics:
Any type of borrowing from persons or banks for improving a business
or personal income that is payable during short or long time;
A duty or responsibility to others that entails settlement by future
transfer or use of assets, provision of services, or other transaction
yielding an economic benefit, at a specified or determinable date, on
occurrence of a specified event, or on demand;
A duty or responsibility that obligates the entity to another, leaving it little or no discretion to avoid settlement; and,
A transaction or event obligating the entity that has already occurred.
Liabilities in financial accounting need not be legally enforceable;
but can be based on equitable obligations or constructive obligations.
An equitable obligation is a duty based on ethical or moral considerations. A constructive obligation
is an obligation that is implied by a set of circumstances in a
particular situation, as opposed to a contractually based obligation.
Long-term liabilities are liabilities with a future benefit over one year, such as notes payable that mature longer than one year.
In accounting, the long-term liabilities are shown on the right wing of the balance-sheet representing the sources of funds, which are generally bounded in form of capital assets.
Examples of long-term liabilities are debentures, mortgage loans and other bank loans. (Note: Not all bank loans are long term as not all are paid over a period greater than a year, an example of this is a bridging loan.)
By convention, the portion of long-term liabilities that must be paid in the coming 12-month period are classified as current liabilities. For example, a loan for which two payments of $1000 are due, one in the next twelve months and the other after that date, would be 'split' into two: the first $1000 would be classified as a current liability, and the second $1000 as a long-term liability (note this example is simplified, and does not take into account any interest or discounting effects, which may be required depending on the accounting rules).
Also "long-term liabilities" are a way to show that you have to pay something off in a time period longer than one year.
A company's debts or obligations that are due within one year. Current liabilities appear on the company's balance sheet and include short term debt, accounts payable, accrued liabilities and other debts.
SUMBER :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asset
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounts_payable
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/currentliabilities.asp
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-term_liabilities
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_asset
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/currentassets.asp
"Simple Present"
1. (+) Anything tangible is capable controll to produces value.
(-) Anything tangible doesn't capable controll to produces value
(?) Does anything tangible capable controll to produces value?
2. (+) The balance sheet of a firm records the monetar.
(-) The balance sheet of a firm doesn’t record the monetar
(?) Does the balance sheet of a firm record the monetar?
3. (+) It is requires that the management will exercise due cares and diligence.
(-) It doesn’t require that the management will exercise due care and diligence
(?) Does it require that the management will exercise due care and diligence?
4. (+) An accounts payable is records in the account payable.
(-) An account payable doesn’t record in the account payable
(?) Does an account payable record in the account payable?
5. (+) Householders is usually track and payes on a monthly basis.
(-) Householders doesn’t usually track and pay on a monthly basis
(?) Does householders usually track and pay on a monthly basis?
6. (+) A variety of checks against abuse are usually present to prevents embezzlement.
(-) A variety of checks against abuse doesn’t usually present to prevents embezzlement
(?) Does a variety of checks against abuse usually present to prevents embezzlement?
7. (+) Accounts payable personnel must watches for fraudulent invoices.
(-) Accounts payable personnel doesn’t must watches for fraudulent invoices
(?) Does accounts payable personnel watches for fraudulent invoices?
8. (+) It is a registration for services is activate when the document return.
(-) It is a registration for services doesn’t activate when the document return
(?) Does a registration for services activate when the document return?
9. (+) An auditor may decide to expands the sample size in such situations.
(-) An auditor doesn’t decide to expands the sample size in such situations
(?) Does an auditor decide to expands the sample size in such situations?
10. (+) Auditors typically prepares an aging structure of accounts payable.
(-) Auditors typically doesn’t prepare an aging structure of accounts payable
(?) Does auditors typically prepare an aging structure of accounts payable?
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